|
Health Care VCs Remain Optimistic About IPO
Mkt
By Brian Gormley
Thursday, June 21, 2007
The public markets for health care companies are not as forbidding
as they appear.
That was the sentiment of public-market investors during a panel
discussion at yesterday's Dow Jones Healthcare Innovations conference
in Redwood City, Calif.
Kurt von Emster, general partner of MPM Capital and manager of
the firm's MPM BioEquities fund, which is used to invest in public
and private companies, said that while the environment for initial
public offerings hasn't been particularly robust, some companies
have traded up after they've gone public. This should help late-stage
private companies to go public in the coming months, he suggested.
In April, for example, obesity-drug maker Orexigen Therapeutics
Inc. went public at $12. The company, whose venture backers include
Domain Associates, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Sofinnova Ventures,
and others, closed yesterday at $16.28.
Not all companies, of course, have enjoyed such a quick run-up
after their IPO. Jazz Pharmaceuticals Inc., for example, priced
its IPO originally in the $24 to $26 range but went public at $18
on June 1 and closed yesterday at $17.
To avoid this problem and improve their chances of trading up,
more companies are setting their IPO prices low, panelists said.
Von Emster said he recently spoke with executives of one company
who said they were projecting their IPO valuation to be only 1.5
times greater than the valuation of the mezzanine round they were
raising, for example.
Some venture capitalists are buying stock at their companies' IPOs
in expectation of strong performance. Evan McCulloch, portfolio
manager and analyst with Franklin Templeton Investments, said venture
firms participating in an IPO can be seen as a vote of confidence
in the company.
But it also creates questions about how firms will manage and ultimately
sell their massive stakes in the company, he said. He added that
he prefers to see venture capitalists get off the boards of companies
after the public offering to make way for independent board members
and those with more operational experience than many venture investors
possess.
One trend working in VCs' favor is that crossover investors are
increasingly active in backing companies that are near a public
offering. In particular, mutual fund companies such as AllianceBernstein
have set up venture programs recently to back late-stage companies.
Von Emster said crossover investors can create a buzz about a private
company on Wall Street, improving the chances of a successful IPO.
Companies also shouldn't be looking at IPOs as their only option.
Von Emster tells all of his companies to pursue a dual-track process
of considering an IPO or merger opportunities with large corporations.

|